Technology News

Obligatory Video Game Outrage

By Annalee Newitz

AT THIS POINT, the outraged response to the latest installment in the Grand Theft Auto series of video games, Liberty City Stories, is pretty much obligatory. Mothers Against Drunk Driving is lobbying to get the video game rated "adults only" (effectively killing it in the U.S. market, where major console manufacturers won't support A.O. games), because there's one scene in the game where you have the option to drive drunk.

Apparently, none of the good ladies of MADD have ever played GTA, since if they had they might have discovered that when you try to drive drunk, the video game informs you that you should take a cab. If you do drive, the cops immediately chase you down, which is exactly the sort of move you'd expect from this sly, fun game, which hit stores last week.

GTA, made by Rockstar Games, is basically a driving-game franchise packed inside an intriguing, disturbing, elaborate urban world where you become a character whose life options are all connected to his ability to drive around in various cities. Usually, you're some kind of bad guy or shady character. Think of it as the video game equivalent of a TV show like The Wire or an urban gangster flick.

What has made GTA so popular among gamers is the way it combines the fun of a driving game with the sprawling possibilities of gamer choice. And I think that's what nongamers find so confusing—and therefore threatening—about it. When you jump into a car in GTA, you aren't rated on your driving skill. You don't have to stay on a predetermined track. Sure, you have to complete a mission, but you can choose to just drive around insanely, exploring the big worlds of the GTA games, beating up cops and murdering people at random if you want. You can take drugs and get superspeedy or ram a truck into a building.

Essentially, you don't have to follow the rules to have fun, if your definition of fun is wanton cartoony destruction, which it clearly is for a lot of people if box-office returns and TV ratings are to be believed. The latest installment of GTA, called Liberty City Stories, is set inside an alternate version of New York City and takes the player even further into a world of narrative choices.

You play a character named Niko, a Serbian war vet who comes to Liberty City to get revenge—or to make peace with his past. Along with several other characters, he's just trying to get by in a huge city and gets sucked into a world of crime and murder along the way. As you go deeper into the game, you realize that your interactions with characters are just as important as running your car missions. You can't get anywhere without making friends, connections, and plunging deeper into Niko's troubled past.

In addition, the game is full of smart, satirical details: you can watch TV, surf the net and listen to the radio for hours of original content that pokes fun at U.S. media. Most of your communication is by cell phone, which adds a simple, realistic touch. If Liberty City Stories were a movie, it would have been directed by Martin Scorsese or David O. Russell, and we'd all be ooohing and aaahhing over its dark, ironic vision of immigrant life in a world at war with itself. But because Liberty City is a video game, where players are in the driver's seat so to speak, it freaks people out. Earlier installments of GTA inspired feminist and cultural-conservative outrage (you have the option to kill prostitutes!) and concern over moral turpitude from Hillary Clinton (you can beat cops to death! Or anybody!).

And yet there are other video games, like the family-friendly role-playing game The Sims, where players can torture people to death in ways far more disturbing than those in GTA. A friend told me gleefully how he had taken one of his Sims characters, stuck him in a VR headset and walled him into a room with just an espresso machine. The character kept drinking coffee and playing the headset, pissing in the corners of the room and crying until he died. Other players have reported that you can stick a bunch of characters in the swimming pool, remove the ladder and drown them. That's not the point of the game, but people can do it.

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The reason these horrible things can happen in The Sims is exactly the same reason they happen in GTA: these are cutting-edge video games defined by player freedom rather than by locking the player into a prescribed narrative loop where veering off the racetrack means "lose" rather than "find a new adventure." When you give players the option to explore their fantasies, you're going to get some dark stuff. Yes, it's disturbing. But it's also the foundation of great art.